Tom Garvin

The Books That Define Ireland


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having unfortunately got himself killed. Almost certainly, this is a mediaeval fable. The first paragraph of the book sets out his purpose clearly:

      Cambrensis, who wrote a celebrated and comically hostile anatomy of Ireland, comes in for special mention by Keating. ‘Gerald of Wales’ alleged that Ireland paid tribute to King Arthur of Caerleon, an absurd story, refuted by Cambrensis himself later in his own work, when he observes that ‘From the first, Ireland has remained free from the invasion of any foreign nation.’ Even the Romans decided not to meddle with the Irish, and Ireland was a refuge for many who wished to flee from tyrannical Roman rule. This seems to be a remote echo of Agricola’s characterisation (in Tacitus’ Agricola) of a first-century independent Ireland living in a notorious freedom and being a provocation to rebellious elements among the British tribes in the time of the Western Empire. Keating twits Spenser’s fraudulent attempts to interpret surnames which are evidently Gaelic or gaelicised Viking as being in reality derived from ordinary English surnames. Here he is attacking a common English and Scottish tendency to describe the Irish as degenerate English and Scots, rather than constituting an historically distinct cultural entity. He rebukes Palesman historian Richard Stanihurst for his apparent hatred of his own countrymen, presumably an emotion often fuelled in invaders by mingled subconscious guilt and fear of vengeance being wreaked on the English lands in the Pale of Dublin by a revived and vengeful Gaelic Ireland. That alternative Ireland was seen as roosting in the hills of Wicklow and looking down hungrily on the fair pastures of Dublin.

      Here can be seen a major theme of FFE. The Norman incursion into Ireland in 1169 and afterwards is seen as a benign event, one which laid the foundation for a joint Hiberno-English nation in Ireland, united in loyalty to the Catholic faith and acceptant of the union with England under the (Catholic) crown of England, seen as the legitimate successor to the High-Kings of Ireland. There seems to be a tacit paralleling of the 1169 event with the legendary Milesian incursion of a millennium earlier, seen as equally benign. This Christian conquest by the Normans is unconvincingly described as peaceful and involving settling mainly on unoccupied land. It is explicitly contrasted with ‘pagan’ invasions by the English which happened later, after the death of King John in 1215 and which did indeed involve the illegitimate stealing of the lands and properties of the Gaelic nobility and gentry by incomers. It also involved criminal assault on the sacred lands of the Church by these hypocritical marauders, pretending to be civilising the Irish and bringing them back into the fold of a true and civil Christianity:

      This kind of denunciation particularly applied to the recent transfer of lands from Catholic to Protestant hands, a process he saw already happening in the early seventeenth century. Obviously, he did not live to see the wholesale transfer of nearly the entire island of Ireland and the expulsion of its entire Catholic ruling class that occurred later in the seventeenth century and early eighteenth, but his words were prescient. Furthermore, they helped to delegitimise the seventeenth-century land grab and keep the memory of it fresh in Irish people’s minds for over two centuries.